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Guest post: A Halsbury’s for the people and the battle against legal complexity

The Cabinet Office and the Office of the Parliamentary Counsel have published a very interesting report criticising the complexity and quality of legislation and suggesting a much greater willingness to do something about it through an initiative dubbed Good Law.

This section gives a flavour:

‘In the course of this review it appeared evident that while users would like legislation that is simple, accessible, easy to comply with and not unnecessarily burdensome, at present those are not the features of modern legislation.

Some of the reasons for legislation falling short of what users hope for are inescapable. But there are other factors which ought to be within reach of government, Parliament, publishers and others – either acting in their own sphere of influence or in partnership.

For that to happen, there needs to be a shared ownership of, and pride in, our legislation. And pieces of legislation need to be regarded not just as documents in their own right, but as parts of a larger mosaic of legislation.

There also needs to be a stronger incentive on all involved in the process to avoid generating excessively complex law, or to act positively to promote accessibility, ease of navigation, and simplification.’

The extent to which simplification is possible and desirable is, of course, a matter for debate; and a debate which will have to encompass the sometimes counter-productive approach of common law decision-making; but the prize for progress on the initiative is improved efficiency and access to justice.

Let me highlight some of the findings in the Cabinet Office Report as part of my encouragement for you to read it:

  • ‘Even legally qualified users frequently complain about the excessive complexity of legislation and often tend to read the explanatory notes accompanying the Bill, rather than the legislative text.’
  • ‘The vast number of legislative effects and their complex interconnections mean that currently the legislation.gov.uk database is not currently entirely up-to-date.’
  • ‘The mystification of legislation though, seems to be generated by the difficulty that users experience in accessing reliable, clear information on their rights and duties, combined with a lack of guidance on the compliance requirements relevant to them and their specific circumstances.’
  • ‘The legislation.gov.uk user study also found that the comprehension level of legislative texts by both legally qualified and non-legally qualified users was generally quite low and that all users found it challenging to read legislation and demonstrate their understanding of it. Most users interviewed said that they expect legislation to be hard to read – even barristers.’
  • ‘Until recently, legislation, legislative techniques and interpretation were often neglected in undergraduate teaching’.

A sense of the complexity is shown by this diagram of the inter-statutory links when looking at the current in-force state of just one act.

That legislation.gov.uk should not be an up-to date and public database of statutes in force is something of a scandal given that, as citizens, our ignorance of the law is no excuse even, as this report shows, if that ignorance is inevitable. Publishers put substantial resource into current law together and making it (more) intelligible; but then sell it on to those who can afford it. It will be interesting to see whether there is any incentive on them, or suppliers of legal services to provide anything approaching digestible access to the law. What we really want to see is a People’s Halsbury’s Law of England – a Herculean task (and one requiring a name the public rather than us lawyers would recognise). LSB/LSCP research suggested that the public is mistrustful of private providers doing this job. Unbundled service providers have more of an incentive to produce genuinely useful information, but risk significant investment which cannot be recouped. Universities have something of an interest in getting involved for the benefit of their students; and as part of their broader mission to engage with the public; but that interest has real practical and resource limits. Furthermore, as we are beginning to see as regards pro bono clinics, these kinds of initiatives risk being used as part of a process of differentiation or marketing by law schools. This militates towards reinvention of wheels and fragmentation.

So the path towards good information about law; never mind good law, is a difficult one, facing significant obstacles; but it merits significant support.

 

Richard Moorhead is professor of law and professional ethics at UCL Faculty of Laws. He blogs at Lawyer Watch. Follow Richard on Twitter